Sentence examples for borrowing claims from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

They could begin to question the government's ability to repay claims in the future, and then raise the cost of borrowing claims to prohibitively high levels.

Similar(59)

Balls also thinks he has a clear target on borrowing, claiming that far from balancing the books in 2015, borrowing is forecast by 2015-16 to have been cumulatively £219bn more than planned in November 2010.

But there is a limit to how much of that you can do; eventually producers' incentives become distorted enough that capacity falls, bringing down potential real output per person with it.You could instead have the government borrow claims from those with an excess and redistribute them to those with a shortfall.

The shadow chancellor, Ed Balls, seized on the fact that Osborne's budget was undermined by the ominous prospect of lower growth, rising unemployment and higher borrowing to claim the government was "clinging to an economic strategy" that is not working.

Shadow Welsh secretary Owen Smith welcomed the principle of allowing borrowing but claimed Wales was still underfunded and that the Welsh budget was being "hammered" by spending cuts.

[laughs] Milton had borrowed this claim for an absolute originality.

Or perhaps not borrowed, but claimed, as part of a birthright whose precise function is to draw out the common meaning of individual experience.

The Business Secretary claims borrowing for growth "would not undermine the central objective of reducing the structural deficit" and may even "assist it by reviving growth".

In an attempt to start winning the political argument on the economy, Labour plans to seize on Tuesday's higher projected public sector borrowing figures to claim the government will be borrowing to fund recession through higher welfare bills, while Labour would borrow to fund growth and ultimately higher tax receipts.

What is more, social time has been the legitimate basis for borrowing money and claiming money.

Such claims borrow from Karl Marx--hardly an American Founding Father--who wrote that true socialism takes wealth "from each according to his ability" and gives it "to each according to his need". Politically codifying such claims, Marx in his Communist Manifesto (1848) demanded "a heavy progressive or graduated income tax" (plank 2) and the "abolition of all right of inheritance" (plank 3).

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